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A sneak preview of the new book in the Michael Bennett series, hitting stores January 2011!
Citation preview
Tick Tock
BOOKS BY JAMES PATTERSON
Featuring Michael Bennett
Tick Tock (with Michael Ledwidge) Worst Case (with Michael Ledwidge) Run for Your Life (with Michael Ledwidge) Step on a Crack (with Michael Ledwidge)
A complete list of books by James Patterson is at the back of the book. For previews of forthcoming books by James Patterson and more information about the author, visit www.jamespatterson.com .
Tick Tock BY
James Patterson AND
Michael Ledwidge
LIT TLE, BROWN AND COMPANY N E W YO R K B O S TO N LO N D O N
Copyright © 2011 by James Patterson
All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Little, Brown and Company Hachette Book Group 237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017 www.hachettebookgroup.com
First Edition: January 2011
Little, Brown and Company is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc. The Little, Brown name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.
The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.
The characters and events in this book are fi ctitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the authors.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Patterson, James. Tick tock / by James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge. — 1st ed. p. cm. ISBN 978-0- 316- 03791-4 (hardcover ed.) — ISBN 978-0- 316- 12852-0 (large print ed.) 1. Detectives — New York (State) — New York — Fiction. 2. Psychopaths — Fiction. 3. Bombings — Fiction. I. Ledwidge, Michael. II. Title. PS3566.A822T53 2011 813'. 54 — dc22 2010031582
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
RRD-IN
Printed in the United States of America
In loving memory of Thomas Ledwidge
— M.L.
Prologue
SEXY BEAST
3
One
LIKE THE LUXURY CO-OPS and fi ve- star French eater-
ies located in Manhattan’s Silk Stocking District, Benchley
East Side Parking was outrageously exclusive. Tucked side
by side and bumper to bumper within its four temperature-
controlled underground levels beneath East 77th Street
were several vintage Porsches, a handful of Ferraris, even
a pair of his- and- hers Lamborghinis.
The out-of- the- box midnight blue SL550 Mercedes
convertible that squealed out of its car elevator at three
minutes past noon that Saturday seemed tailor- fi t to the
high- rent neighborhood.
So did the lean forty- something waiting by the garage’s
offi ce when the sleek Merc stopped on a dime out front.
With his salt- and- pepper Beckham buzz cut, pressed kha-
kis, silk navy golf shirt, and deep golden tan that suggested
even deeper pockets, it was hard to tell if the car or its driver
was being described by the purring Merc’s vanity plate:
James Patterson
4
SXY BST
“With this heat, I fi gured you’d want the top down, as
usual, Mr. Berger,” the smiling half- Hispanic, half- Asian
garage attendant said as he bounced out and held open the
wood- inlaid door. “Have a good one, now.”
“Thanks, Tommy,” Berger said, deftly slipping the man
a fi ve as he slid behind the luxury sports car’s iconic three-
pronged steering wheel. “I’ll give it a shot.”
The fi ne leather seat slammed luxuriously into Berger’s
back as he launched the convertible with a high- torque
snarl down East 77th Street and out onto Fifth Avenue.
The crisp, almost sweet smell of Central Park’s pin oaks
and dogwoods fused harmoniously with the scent of the
hand- stitched leather. At 59th Street, the park’s treetops
gave way to the ornate fairy- tale facade of the Plaza Hotel.
Moments later, along both sides of the upscale boulevard,
glittering signs began to fl ick past like a Vanity Fair maga-
zine come to life: Tiffanys, Chanel, Zegna, Pucci, Fendi,
Louis Vuitton. Outside the stores, swarms of summer Sat-
urday tourists took pictures and stood gaping as if they
were having trouble believing they were standing in the
very center of the capital of the world.
But the world’s most expensive avenue might as well
have been a dirt road through a shit kicker’s cornfi eld as
far as Berger was concerned. Behind the mirrored lenses
of his Persol aviators, he kept his gray eyes locked level
and forward, his mind blank.
Tick Tock
5
It was his one true talent. In his life, every victory had
come down to singleness of purpose, his ability to focus,
to leave out everything but the matter at hand.
Even so, he felt his pulse skitter when he fi nally arrived
at his destination, the New York Public Library’s main
branch on the west side of Fifth Avenue between 41st and
42nd Streets. In fact, as he slowed, he felt his adrenaline
surge, and his heart begin to beat almost painfully in time
with the car’s indicator.
Even Olivier had stage fright, he reminded himself as
he carefully turned onto East 43 rd Street. Jack Dempsey.
Elvis Presley. All men felt fear. The distinction of great and
worthy men like him was the ability to manage it, to act
despite the fact that it was breathing down their necks.
By the time he tucked the Merc into a parking spot in
front of a Carvel ice- cream truck half a block farther east,
he felt somewhat better. To ground himself completely, he
patiently watched the hardtop hum into place over his
head, precise, symmetrical, a glorious harmony of moving
parts. By the time it locked itself down, his fear was still
there but he knew he could man it.
Move it, Mr. Berger, he thought. Now or never .
He lifted the heavy laptop bag from the passenger- seat
foot well and opened the door.
Now it was.
6
Two
PASSING UNDER THE GRAND BEAUX ARTS arched
portico and through the revolving door of the library, Berger
immediately noticed that the steely- eyed ex-cop who usu-
ally worked the front hall on Saturdays wasn’t there. Instead,
there was a young summer- hire slouch in an ill- fi tting
blazer. Even better. The bored- looking bridge- and- tunneler
waved Berger through before he could even lift a fi nger to
his bag’s zipper.
The hushed Rose Reading Room on the third fl oor was
about the size of a professional soccer fi eld. It was rimmed
with ten- foot- high caramel- colored wooden shelves and
lit by brass rococo chandeliers that hung down from its
fi fty- one- foot- high, mural- painted coffered ceiling. Berger
stepped past table after long table of very serious- looking
thirty- and forty- somethings, earbuds snug in their ears
as they stared intently at laptop screens. Graduate students
Tick Tock
7
and ardent self- improvers. No Hamptons this summer
weekend for this studious bunch.
He found a seat at the last table along the north wall,
with his back to the door of the Rare Book Division of the
Brooke Russell Astor Reading Room. He pretended to play
Sudoku on his nifty new iPhone until the only other per-
son at the study table, a pregnant Asian woman in a Juicy
tracksuit, got up twenty minutes later.
As she waddled away, Mr. Berger took one last deep
breath and slowly released it.
Then he slipped on a pair of rubber surgical gloves
under the table and slid the bomb out of the laptop bag.
It looked exactly like an Apple MacBook seventeen- inch
laptop except that there was a hollowed- out space where
the keyboard, mouse pad, and computer guts had once
been. In their place now sat two kilograms of T4, the Ital-
ian version of the plastic explosive RDX. On top of the pale
vanilla- colored plastic explosive sat another two- inch- thick
layer of barbed stainless- steel roofi ng nails, like a double
helping of silver sprinkles on the devil’s ice- cream cone.
There was a gel- like adhesive already attached to the
device’s bottom. He pressed the bomb fi rmly down in front
of him, gluing it securely to the library desk.
The detonator cap had already been inserted into the
explosive and now merely awaited the fi nal connection to
an electrical charge, which would occur when someone
discovered the laptop and made the mistake of opening
James Patterson
8
the cover. Tied just inside the cover with a snug lanyard
knot made of fi shing line was a mercury switch, an inge-
nious little thermometer- like glass tube that was used in
vending- machine alarms. When the lid was closed, you
could play Frisbee with the IED. Once the lid rose two
inches, however, the liquid mercury would spill to the
switch’s bottom, cover its electrical leads, and initiate
instant detonation.
Mr. Berger imagined the bomb’s massive shockwave
ripping through the crowded Rose Reading Room, blow-
ing apart everything and everyone within forty feet and
sending a killing wall of shrapnel in every direction at four
times the speed of sound.
He peeled off his gloves and stood with the now- empty
laptop bag, careful not to touch anything. He crossed the
room and stepped quickly out the exit without looking
back.
It was begun, he thought with a feeling of magnifi cent
relief as he found the marble stairs. From here on in, it
would be all about timing. A race against the clock, so to
speak.
On your mark.
Get set.
“Blow,” Mr. Berger whispered happily to himself, and
began to take the stairs down two at a time.
Book One
DOWN BY THE SEA
11
Chapter 1
“UNDER THE BOARDWALK , down by the sea,” I crooned
in a high voice, really getting into it with my eyes closed.
“On a blanket with my ten big fat babies is where I’ll be.”
It seemed to me like an appropriate song for walking
along a sandy dirt road beside the blue- gray Atlantic.
Unfortunately, I was the only one who thought so. A split
second later, a fusillade of groans and boos and Bronx
cheers sailed back from all ten of my kids.
Still I bowed, displaying my trademark grace under
pressure. Never let them see you sweat, even on summer
vacation, which is really hard when you think about it.
My name is Mike Bennett, and as far as I know, I’m still
the only cop in the NYPD living in his own private TLC
show. Some of my more jovial coworkers like to call me
Detective Mike Plus Ten. It’s actually Detective Mike Plus
Eleven if you include my grandfather Seamus. Which I do,
since he’s more incorrigible than all my kids put together.
James Patterson
12
It was the beginning of week two of my humongous
family’s much- needed vacation out in Breezy Point, Queens,
and I was defi nitely in full goof- off mode. The eighteen-
hundred- square- foot saltbox out here on the “Irish Rivi-
era,” as all the cops and fi remen who summer here call it,
had been in my mom’s family, the Murphys, for a genera-
tion. It was more crowded than a rabbit’s warren, but it
was also nonstop swimming and hot dogs and board
games, and beer and bonfi res at night.
No e-mail. No electronics. No modern implements of
any kind except for the temperamental A/C and a saltwater-
rusted bicycle. I watched as Chrissy, the baby of the bunch,
chased a tern, or maybe it was a piping plover, on the
shoulder of the road.
The Bennett summer White House was open for
business.
Time was fl ying, but I was making the most of it. As
usual. For a single father of double- digit kids, making the
most of things pretty much went without saying.
“If you guys don’t like the Drifters, how about a little
Otis Redding?” I called up to everyone. “All together now.
‘Sitting on the Dock of the Bay’ on three.”
“Is that any example to them, Mike? We need to pick it
up or we’ll be late,” Mary Catherine chided me in her
brogue.
I forgot to mention Mary Catherine. I’m probably the
only cop in the NYPD with an Irish nanny as well. Actu-
ally with what I pay her, she is more like a selfl ess angel of
Tick Tock
13
mercy. I bet they’ll name a Catholic school after her before
long, Blessed Mary Catherine, patron saint of wiseacre
cops and domestic chaos.
And as always, the young, attractive lass was right. We
were on our way to St. Edmund’s on Oceanside Avenue for
fi ve-o’clock mass. Vacation was no excuse for missing
mass, especially for us, since my grandfather Seamus, in
addition to being a comedian, was a late-to- the- cloth priest.
What else? Did I mention all my kids were adopted?
Two of them are black, two Hispanic, one Asian, and the
rest Caucasian. Typical our family is not.
“Would ya look at that?” Seamus said, standing on the
sandy steps of St. Edmund’s and tapping his watch when
we fi nally arrived. “It must be the twelve apostles. Of
course not. They’d be on time for mass. Get in here, hea-
thens, before I forget that I’m not a man of violence.”
“Sorry, Father,” Chrissy said, a sentiment that was
repeated eleven more times in rough ascending order by
Shawna, Trent, Fiona, Bridget, Eddie, Ricky, Jane, Brian,
Juliana, my eldest, Mary Catherine, and last, but not least,
yours truly.
Seamus put a hand on my elbow as I was fruitlessly
searching for a pew that would seat a family of twelve.
“Just to let you know, I’m offering mass for Maeve
today,” he said.
Maeve was my late wife, the woman who put together
my ragtag wonderful family before falling to ovarian cancer
a few years later. I still woke up some mornings, reaching
James Patterson
14
out for a moment before my brutal shitty aha moment that
I was alone.
I smiled and nodded as I patted Seamus’s wrinkled
cheek.
“I wouldn’t have it any other way, Monsignor,” I said as
the organ started.
15
Chapter 2
THE SERVICE WAS QUICK but quite nice. Especially
the part where we prayed for Maeve. I’m not in line to
become pope anytime soon, but I like mass. It’s calming,
restorative. A moment to review where you’ve gone wrong
over the past week and maybe think about getting things
back on track.
Call it Irish psychotherapy.
Therapy for this Irish psycho, anyway.
All in all, I came back out into the sun feeling pretty
calm and upbeat. Which lasted about as long as it took the
holy water I blessed myself with to dry.
“Get him! Hit him harder! Yeah, boyyyyzzz!” some kid
was yelling.
There was some commotion alongside the church.
Through the departing crowd and cars, I saw about half
a dozen kids squaring off in the parking lot.
“Look out, Eddie!” someone yelled.
James Patterson
16
Eddie? I thought. Wait a second.
That was one of my kids!
I rushed into the brawl, with my oldest son, Brian, at
my heels. There was a pile of kids swinging and kicking
on the sun- bleached asphalt. I started grabbing shirt col-
lars, yanking kids away, putting my NYPD riot police
training to good use.
I found my son Eddie at the bottom of the scrum, red-
faced and near tears.
“You want some more, bitch? Come and get it!” one of
the kids who’d been kicking my son yelled as he lurched
forward. Eddie, our resident bookworm, was ten. The tall,
pudgy kid with the Mets cap askew looked at least fourteen.
“Back it up!” I yelled at the earringed punk with a lot of
cop in my voice. More in my eyes.
Eddie, tears gone, just angry now, thumbed some blood
from a nostril.
“What happened?” I said.
“That jerk called Trent something bad, Dad.”
“What?”
“An Irish jig.”
I turned and glared at the big kid with the even bigger
mouth. Trent was even younger than Eddie, an innocent
seven- year- old kid who happened to be black. I really felt
like knocking the fat kid’s hat back straight with a slap.
Instead, I quickly thought of another idea.
“In that case,” I said, staring at the delinquent, “kick
his ass.”
Tick Tock
17
“My pleasure,” Eddie said, trying to lunge from my
grip.
“No, not you, Eddie. Brian’s not doing anything.”
Brian, six foot one and on the Fordham Prep JV foot-
ball team, smiled as he stepped forward.
At the very last second, I placed a palm on his chest.
Violence never solved anything. At least when there were
witnesses around. Twenty or thirty loyal St. Edmund’s
parishioners had stopped to watch the proceedings.
“What’s your name?” I said as I walked over and per-
sonally got in the kid’s face.
“Flaherty,” the kid said with a stupid little smile.
“That’s Gaelic for dumb- ass,” Juliana said by my
shoulder.
“What’s your problem, Flaherty?” I said.
“Who has a problem?” Flaherty said. “Maybe it’s you
guys. Maybe the Point isn’t your cup of tea. Maybe you
should bring your rainbow- coalition family out to the
Hamptons. You know, Puff Daddy? That crowd?”
I took a deep breath and released it even more slowly.
This kid was getting on my nerves. Even though he was
just a teen, my somewhat cleansed soul was wrestling val-
iantly not to commit the sin of wrath.
“I’m going to tell you this one time, Flaherty. Stay away
from my kids or I’m going to give you a free ride in my
police car.”
“Wow, you’re a cop. I’m scared,” Flaherty said. “This is
the Point. I know more cops than you do, old man.”
James Patterson
18
I stepped in closer to him, close enough to head butt,
anyway.
“Do any of them work at Spofford?” I said in his ear.
Spofford was New York’s infamous juvy hall. By his
swallow, I thought I’d fi nally gotten through.
“Whatever,” Flaherty said, walking away.
Why me? I thought, turning away from the stunned
crowd of churchgoers. You never saw this kind of crap on
TLC. And what the hell did he mean by old man?
“Eddie?” I said as I started leading my gang back along
the hot, sandy road toward the promised land of our
saltbox.
“Yes, Dad?”
“Stay away from that kid.”
“Brian?” I said a few seconds later.
“Yeah, Pop?”
“Keep an eye on that kid.”
19
Chapter 3
AN HOUR LATER , I was out on the back deck of my ances-
tral home, working the ancestral grill full- tilt boogie. Dogs
on the warming rack. Cheese slices waiting to be applied to
the rows of sizzling, freshly ground burgers. Blue smoke in
my face, ice- cold bottle of Spaten lager in my hand. We were
so close to the water, I could actually hear the rhythmic roll-
and- crash of saltwater dropping onto hard- packed sand.
If I leaned back on the creaky rail of the deck and
turned to my left, I was actually able to see the Atlantic
two blocks to the east. If I turned to the right, to the other
side of Jamaica Bay, I could see the sun starting its long
descent toward the skyline of Manhattan, where I worked.
I hadn’t had to look in that direction for over a week now
and was praying that it stayed that way until the fi rst of
August.
No doubt about it. My world was a fi ne place and worth
fi ghting for. Maybe not in church parking lots, but still.
James Patterson
20
I heard something on XM Radio behind me. It was the
eighties song “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” by
Tears for Fears. I laughed as I remembered dancing to it
with Maeve at our wedding. I cranked it. You better believe
I was preoccupied with 1985. No Internet. Spiky, gelled
hair. Weird Al Yankovic. John Hughes movies. If they
build a real hot- tub time machine, I’m going back.
“Bet’s to you, Padre,” I heard Trent say behind me.
Inside at the kitchen table, a tense game of Irish Riviera
Hold ’em was under way. A lot of candy had been trading
hands all evening.
“All right, hit me,” Seamus said.
“Grandpa, this isn’t blackjack,” Fiona complained with
a giggle.
“Go fi sh?” Seamus tried.
I thought about what my new young friend Flaherty
had said about my multicultural family. It was funny how
wrong people got it. My family wasn’t a Hollywood social
experiment. Our gang had come from my cop cases and
from my departed wife Maeve’s work as a trauma nurse at
Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx. Our children were the
survivors of the most horrible circumstances New York
City had to offer. Drug addiction, poverty, suicide. Maeve
and I were both from big families, but we weren’t able to
have kids. So we took them in one by one by one. It was as
simple and crazy as that.
I turned as Trent opened the sliders to the deck.
I was prepping my father- son sit- down about racist
Tick Tock
21
dumb- asses when I saw that he was holding something. It
was my work cell, and it was vibrating. I threw a panicked
glance back toward the Manhattan skyline. I knew it.
Things had been too good for too long, not to mention way
too quiet.
“Answer it,” I fi nally said to him, pissed.
“Bennett,” Trent said in a deep voice. “Gimme a crime
scene.”
“Wise guy,” I said, snatching the phone out of his hand.
“That wasn’t me,” I said, turning down the radio. “And
you can keep the crime scene.”
“Wish I could,” my new boss, Inspector Miriam Schwartz,
said.
I closed my eyes. Idiot! I knew we should have gone to
the Grand Canyon.
“I’m on vacation,” I protested.
“We both are, but this is big, Mike. Homeland Security
big. Just got off the phone with Manhattan Borough Com-
mand. Someone left one hell of a bomb at the main branch
of the New York Public Library.”
I almost dropped the phone as a pulse of cold crackled
down my spine and the backs of my legs. My stomach
churned as memories of working down at the World Trade
Center pit after 9/11 began to fl ash before my eyes. Fear,
sorrow, useless anger, the end-of- the- world stench of
scorched metal in my clothes, in the palms of my hands.
Screw that, I thought. Not again. Please .
“A bomb?” I said slowly. “Is it armed?”
James Patterson
22
“No, thank God. It’s disarmed. But it’s ‘sophisticated as
shit,’ to quote Paul Cell from Bomb Squad. There was a
note with it.”
“I hate fucking notes. Was it a sorry one?” I said.
“No such luck, Mike,” Miriam said. “It said, ‘This wasn’t
supposed to go boom, but the next one will.’ Something
like that. The commissioner wants Major Case on this. I
need my major player. That’s you, Mickey.”
“Mickey just left,” I groaned. “This is Donald. Can I
take a message?”
“They’re waiting on you, Mike,” my boss urged.
“Yeah, who isn’t?” I said, dropping the spatula as my
burgers burned.
23
Chapter 4
A DAY OR TWO AFTER 9/11, a dramatic photograph of
a fi retruck crossing the Brooklyn Bridge on its way to the
burning Twin Towers was splashed across the front page
of the Daily News . It’s an incredible shot, even before you
learn that every fi reman on the truck, Ladder 118, ended
up dying in the subsequent collapse.
As I rolled my beat-up Suburban along the same route
under the famous bridge’s arches back into the city toward
my date with a bomb on 42nd Street, for some strange rea-
son, I couldn’t stop thinking of that picture.
I skipped the backed-up FDR Drive and took the side
streets, St. James to the Bowery to Park Avenue South. Half
a block west of Grand Central Terminal, wooden NYPD
sawhorses had been set up, cordoning off 42nd Street in
both directions. Behind the yellow tape, a crowd of sum-
mering Asian and European tourists stood front- row- center,
cameras aloft, taking in some action.
James Patterson
24
After I badged my way through the outer perimeter, I
parked behind a Seventeenth Precinct radio car half a
block south of 42nd Street. As I was getting out, I spotted a
shiny new blue Crown Vic and a couple of tall and neat-
looking guys in JTTF polo shirts sitting on its hood, talk-
ing on their cell phones.
I doubted they were here to play polo. Calling in the
Joint Terrorism Task Force Feds at the slightest hint of the
T word was standard operating procedure in our jittery
post 9/11 metropolis. The Feds didn’t seem too impressed
with me or my gold shield as I walked past them. I knew I
should have put a jacket on over my Hawaiian shirt.
When I arrived at the corner diagonal to the library, I
could see more barricades far down 42nd Street at Sixth
Avenue and three blocks in both directions up and down
Fifth Avenue. The silence and lack of traffi c on what
was usually one of the busiest intersections on earth was
zombie- movie eerie.
“¿Sarge, qué pasa?” I said, showing my bling to the His-
panic female uniform at the inner perimeter’s aluminum
gate.
“Seems like some skell forgot his overdue books so he
returned a booby- trapped bomb to the library instead,”
she said as I signed into her crime scene logbook. “We got
the place evacked, including Bryant Park. The Bomb Nuts
are inside. Midtown North Squad took a bus of witnesses
and staff back to the precinct, but I heard it ain’t looking
too good.”
Tick Tock
25
Among the library’s columns and fountains, I passed
nervous- looking Midtown North Task Force and Seven-
teenth Precinct uniforms. Some of the cops were holding
what appeared to be radar guns but were really radiation
detectors. An unmarked van geared with god knew what
kind of testing equipment was parked at the curb.
At the front entrance of the library, a redheaded guy in
a white marshmallow- man Tyvek suit was walking out
with a yellow Lab on a leash. The Labrador wasn’t a seeing-
eye dog, I knew, but an EDC, an explosive- detecting canine.
I loved dogs, just not at crime scenes. A dog at a crime
scene means bombs or dead bodies, and I wasn’t particu-
larly jazzed about seeing either one.
Ain’t looking too good seemed like the midsummer eve-
ning’s theme, I thought as I climbed the stairs between the
two giant stone lions.
26
Chapter 5
A BIG BALD GUY with a twirly black mustache and tacti-
cal blue fatigues met me beneath the landmark building’s
massive portico. With his mustache, Paul Cell bore a strik-
ing resemblance to the guy on the Bomb Squad’s logo
patch, depicting a devil- may- care Red Baron– looking guy
riding a bomb in front of the skyline of Manhattan.
“We got the parked cars and street furniture sniffed, so
I’m pretty sure there aren’t any secondary devices,” Cell
said. “Think about it. Draw in the fi rst responders with a
decoy. That’s what I’d do. Look at all these windows. Some
jihadist could be behind any one of them right now with
his fi nger on the button, watching us, aching for that glo-
rious thump and fl ash of holy light.”
“Christ, Paul, please,” I said, clutching my chest. “I
skipped my Lipitor this morning.”
Cell and his guys were the world’s elite in bomb han-
dling, as tight and quick and effi cient as an NHL team.
Tick Tock
27
More so probably since the penalty box on this squad was
made of pine. All cops are crazy, but these guys took the
cake.
“Fine, fi ne. You ready to see the main attraction?” Cell
said, ushering me through the library door with a gracious
wave of his hand.
“No, but let’s do it, anyway,” I said, taking a breath.
We passed another half dozen even more nervous-
looking cops as we crossed the library’s monster marble
entry hall to a fl ight of stone stairs. More bomb techs were
helping their buddy out of the green astronaut- like Kevlar
bomb suit in the ostentatious wood- paneled rotunda on
the third fl oor. Another guy was putting away the four-
wheeler wireless robot and the X-ray equipment.
“Uh, won’t we need that stuff?” I said.
Cell shook his head.
“We already deactivated the device. Actually, we didn’t
have to. It wasn’t meant to go off. Here, I’ll show you.”
I reluctantly followed him into the cavernous reading
room. The space resembled a ballroom and was even more
impressive than the entry hall, with its massive arched
windows, chandeliers, and nineteenth- century indoor foot-
ball fi eld of books. The last library table in the northern
end zone of the elaborate room was covered by a thick
orange Kevlar bomb- suppression blanket. I felt my pulse
triple and my hands clench involuntarily as Cell lifted
it off.
In the center of the table was what looked like a white
James Patterson
28
laptop. Then I saw the nails and wires and claylike plastic
explosive where the keyboard should have been, and
shivered.
On the screen, the chilling and redundant words I AM
A BOMB fl ashed on and off before the scrolling message:
THIS WASN’T SUPPOSED TO GO BOOM, BUT
THE NEXT ONE WILL. I SWEAR IT ON POOR
LAWRENCE’S EYES.
“This guy has style,” Cell said, looking almost admir-
ingly at the bomb. “It’s basically like a Claymore mine.
Two K’s of plastic behind all these nails, one huge mother
of a shotgun shell. All wired to a nifty motion- sensitive
mercury switch, only the second one I’ve ever seen. He
even glued it to the desk so someone would have to open it
and spill the mercury.”
“How . . . interactive of him,” I said, shaking my head.
By far, my least favorite part of the message was the
ominous reference to the next one. I was afraid of that. It
looked like somebody wanted to play a little game with
the NYPD. Considering I was on vacation, unless it was
beach ball, I really wasn’t that interested in games.
“He used a real light touch with a soldering gun to wire
it up to the battery. He must know computers as well,
because even though the hard drive is missing, he was able
to program his little greeting card through the computer’s
fi rmware internal operating system.”
Tick Tock
29
“Why didn’t it go off?” I said.
“He cut one of the wires and capped both ends in order
for it not to go off, thank God. Security guy said the room
was packed, like it is every Saturday. This would have
killed a dozen people easily, Mike. Maybe two dozen. The
blast wave itself from this much plastic could collapse a
house.”
We stared silently at the scrolling message.
“It almost sounds like a poem, doesn’t it?” Cell said.
“Yeah,” I said, taking out my BlackBerry and speed-
dialing my boss. “I’ve even seen the style before. It’s called
psychotic pentameter.”
“Tell me what we got, Mike,” Miriam said a moment
later.
“Miriam,” I said, staring at the fl ashing I AM A BOMB .
“What we got here is a problem.”
30
Chapter 6
THE ALEXANDER HOTEL just off Madison on 44th was
understaffed, overpriced, and excessively seedy. All the
grim, peeling walls, off- white towels, and pot smoke and
piss stench $175 a night could buy.
Sitting cross- legged on the desk that he’d moved in
front of his top- fl oor room’s window, Berger slowly panned
his camera across the columns and entablatures of the
landmark marble library seventeen stories below.
The $11,000 Nikkor super- zoom lens attached to his
35-millimeter digital camera could make faces distinguish-
able at up to a mile. At a block and a half, with the incred-
ibly vivid magnifi cation, Berger could see the sweat droplets
on the fi rst responders’ nervous faces.
Beside him on the desk was a laptop, a digital stop-
watch, and a legal tablet fi lled with the neat shorthand
notes he’d been taking for the past several hours. Evacua-
tion procedures. Response times. He’d left the window
Tick Tock
31
open so that he could hear the sirens, immerse himself in
the confusion on the street.
He was meticulously photographing the equipment
inside the open back door of the Bomb Squad van when
someone knocked on the door. Freaking, Berger swung
immediately off the desk. He lifted something off the bed
as he passed. It was a futuristic- looking Austrian Steyr
AUG submachine gun, all thirty 5.56 NATO rounds
already cocked, locked, and ready to rock.
“Yes?” Berger said as he lifted the assault rifl e to his
shoulder.
“Room service. The coffee you ordered, sir,” said a voice
behind the door.
No way anyone could be onto him this quickly! Had
someone in another window seen him? What the hell was
this? He leveled the machine gun’s long suppressed barrel
center mass on the door.
“I didn’t order anything,” Berger said.
“No?” the voice said. There was a pause. A long one. In
his mind, Berger saw a SWAT cop in a ski mask applying a
breaching charge on the door. Berger eyed down the bar-
rel, muscles bunching on his wiry forearms, fi nger hover-
ing over the trigger, heart stopped, waiting.
“Oh, shit — er, I mean, sugar,” the hotel worker said
fi nally. “My mistake. It’s an eleven, not a seventeen. So
sorry, sir. I can’t read my own handwriting. Sorry to have
bothered you.”
More than you’ll ever know, Berger thought, rubbing
James Patterson
32
the tension out of the bridge of his nose. He waited until
he heard the double roll of the elevator door down the out-
side hall before he lowered the gunstock off his shoulder.
A man was standing talking to the Bomb Squad chief
down on the library’s pavilion when Berger arrived back
to the zoom lens. After clicking a close-up shot with the
camera, he smiled as he examined the looming face on the
screen.
It was him. Finally. Detective Michael Bennett. New
York’s quote unquote fi nest had arrived at last.
The feeling of satisfaction that hummed through Berger
was almost the same as the psychic glee he got when he’d
perfectly anticipated a countermove in a game of chess.
Berger grinned as he squinted through the viewfi nder,
watching Bennett. He knew all about him, his high- profi le
NYPD career, his Oprah - ready family. Berger shot a glance
over at the rifl e on the bed. From this distance, he could
easily put a tight grouping into the cop with the sup-
pressed rifl e. Blow him to pieces, splatter them all over the
marble columns and steps.
Wouldn’t that stir the pot? Berger thought, taking his
eyes off the gun. All in due time. Stick to the plan. Stay
with the mission.
“Stay tuned, my friends,” Berger said, allowing himself
a brief smile as he clicked another shot of the clueless cops.
“There’s much more where this came from. In Lawrence’s
honor.”
33
Chapter 7
I DIDN’T HAVE A CARE in the world as I fought the
Saturday- night gridlock on the BQE back to Breezy Point.
No, wait a second. That’s what I was wishing were true.
My real mood was closer to depressed and deeply dis-
turbed after my face time with the sophisticated booby-
trapped bomb and cryptic e-note.
Cell and his crew had ended up cutting off the entire
library tabletop to transport the bomb out to their range in
the Bronx. A quick call to Midtown North revealed that no
one in the library or its staff had noticed anyone or any-
thing particularly out of the ordinary.
With the absence of security cameras at the location, we
were left with basically nada, except for one extremely
sophisticated improvised explosive device and a seemingly
violent nut’s promise to deliver more. To add insult to
injury, a briefi ng about the incident had been called for the
morning down at One Police Plaza, my presence required.
James Patterson
34
I hate seemingly violent nuts, I thought as I got on the
Belt Parkway. Especially ones who really seem to know
what they’re doing.
Even though it was ten and way past everyone’s bed-
time, all the windows of the beach house were lit as I
parked the SUV and came up our sandy path. I could hear
my kids inside laughing as Seamus held court. It sounded
like a game of Pictionary, the old codger’s favorite. He was
a born ham.
I went around back and grabbed a couple of beers to
wind down with on the porch. When I came back, I spot-
ted a good- looking blonde sitting on the steps.
Hey, wait a second, I thought after my double- take.
That’s not just a good- looking blonde, that’s my au pair,
Mary Catherine.
“Psst,” I called to her, waving the Spatens temptingly
from the shadows. “Come on. Run before someone sees.”
We crossed the two blocks to the beach and walked out
on the dunes, drinking, taking our time. We made a left
and headed north toward a fi remen’s bar nearby called the
Sugar Bowl that we’d been to a couple of nights after the
kids had gone to sleep.
If you haven’t guessed by now, my relationship with
Mary Catherine was more than merely professional. Not
that much more, but who knew where it was heading?
Not me, that was for sure. Mary Catherine was a nice-
looking female. I, of course, was a handsome gentleman.
We were both hetero. Add vacation and cramped quarters,
Tick Tock
35
and trouble was bound to happen. At least, that’s what I
was kind of hoping.
“How’s the thesis coming?” I said as we walked along
the beach.
In addition to being the Bennett nanny, Mary Cathe-
rine had an art history degree from Trinity College in
Dublin and was now in the midst of getting her master’s
from Columbia. Which made her as smart and sophisti-
cated as she was pretty and kind. She was truly a special
person. Why she insisted on hanging around all of us
remained a mystery that even I hadn’t been able to crack.
“Slowly,” she said.
“What’s the summer course again?”
“Architectural history,” she said.
I drew a massive blank. Dead air.
“How about those Yanks?” I tried.
As we approached the loud, crowded bar, Mary Cathe-
rine stopped.
“Let’s keep going, Mike. It’s so nice out,” she said, hook-
ing a right and walking across some more dunes and sea
grass down toward the Atlantic.
I liked the sound of that. No dead air this time.
“If you insist,” I said.
We were strolling beside the rumbling waves at the
shoreline when she dropped her beer. We went to grab it at
the same time and bonked heads as the surf splattered
around our ankles.
“Are you okay?” I said, holding her by her shoulders.
James Patterson
36
We were so close our chins were almost touching. For one
delicious second, we looked into each other’s eyes.
That’s when she kissed me. Softly, sweetly. I put my
arms around her waist and pulled her toward me. She was
lighter than I thought she would be, softer, so delicate.
After a minute as we continued to slowly kiss, I felt her
warm hands tremble against the back of my neck.
“Are you okay, Mary?” I whispered. “Are you cold?”
“Wait. Yes. I mean, no. I mean, I’m sorry, Mike,” she
said, suddenly breaking away.
In the faint light from the bar’s neon signs, I watched
her cross the beach at a fast walk that turned into a jog.
Rooted to the wet sand, feeling about fi fteen emotions at
once, I noticed my hands were also trembling a little now.
She passed the bar at a sprint, heading back toward the
house.
“Sorry?” I said to myself as I rubbed my hot and sore
head by the water. “That’s the best thing to happen to me
all day. Maybe even all year.”
37
Chapter 8
AFTER THAT CASANOVA MOMENT , instead of head-
ing straight home, I decided to stop in at the Sugar Bowl to
apply something cold to my wounded — What? Heart?
Ego? I couldn’t decide. I sipped a crisp Heineken as I
watched the Mets lose to the Cubs at Citi Field. It seemed
like there was an epidemic of striking out all over Queens
tonight.
As I drowned my sorrows, I thought about what had
just happened between me and Mary C. Or to be more
precise, I lamented what hadn’t happened.
Because I had to admit, it had been a nice kiss. Tender
and sweet and surprisingly sensual. I defi nitely would
have liked to stay down there along the water line with
her, perhaps reconstructing an outer- borough version of
that famous beach make- out scene in From Here to Eter-
nity . Instead, she’d run like it was a scene from Jaws .
“Hey, you’re cute,” said a young dark- haired woman
James Patterson
38
next to the pool table as I was coming out of the men’s
room fi ve minutes later.
I stopped in my tracks and took in the attractive thirty-
something’s barely-there tank and tight shorts, her slightly
drunk- looking cute face, the Tinker Bell tattoo on her left
ankle. I couldn’t remember the last time a tipsy young
woman with a Disney tattoo had hit on me. Probably
because it had never happened before. My summer hookup
radar was going like gangbusters. Maybe the night wasn’t
such a bust after all.
But before I could come up with a snappy, charming
response, the text jingle sounded from my cell.
I glanced at it. It was from Mary Catherine. Of course it
was. Now she wants to connect? I thought, thumbing the
message open.
Sorry I freaked on you, Mike. Putting
the kids to bed. Left the back door open.
“The kids?” Tinker Bell said, reading my BlackBerry
smartphone over my shoulder. “Where’s your wedding
ring? In your back pocket? Get a life, creep.”
I opened my mouth to explain myself but then closed it
as I realized Tinker Bell actually was right. What was I
doing? I wasn’t some barhopping kid anymore. I defi nitely
wasn’t Peter Pan. I was more like the old lady who lived in
a shoe. Someone had to be the grown-up, and unfortu-
nately that someone was me.
I dropped a fi ve on the bar on my way out.
I came in through the cottage’s back door ten minutes
Tick Tock
39
later. I tiptoed through what we called “the dorm,” the
big, rambling family room where all the boys slept on pull-
out couches and air mattresses. They were all asleep, sun-
burned, exhausted, and dreaming happy midsummer-
night dreams after another day of all the beachside heaven
the tri- state area would allow.
My baby, Chrissy, giggled in her sleep as I kissed her
good night in the girls’ tiny, crowded bedroom next door. I
looked at the massive pile of seashells on the table. At least
someone was still having a good time.
As I was heading to my own bunk, I saw Mary Cathe-
rine through the crack of an open door. With her eyes
closed, she looked ethereal, otherworldly, serene as a cem-
etery angel.
I tore my eyes away and forced myself to continue down
the hallway before I succumbed to the urge to go in and
kiss her good night, too.
40
Chapter 9
IT SEEMED LIKE I’D JUST FALLEN ASLEEP when my
eyes shot open in the dark, my heart racing. Confused, I
lifted my cell phone off the bedside table to see if its ring-
ing was what woke me up. That’s when I heard glass
breaking.
“Dad!” one of the kids called from down the hall.
It was coming from the dorm. I jumped out of bed and
began turning on lights as I ran.
Beside Ricky’s bed by the bay window, there was bro-
ken glass and a chunk of concrete. I ran to the window,
then ducked as a beer bottle ricocheted off the glassless
frame and whizzed past my ear.
I could see a small car parked in front of the house with
its lights off. Two or three people were in it.
“You suck, Bennett!” called a voice. “Get out of the
Point while you still can!”
On the wings of hate, I fl ew out of the room toward the
Tick Tock
41
front door. I was past pissed, more like enraged. Those
bastards could have hurt or killed one of my kids. In bare
feet, wearing just my boxer shorts, I ran out the front door,
picking up an aluminum baseball bat from the porch as
I ran.
The car’s engine raced as I hit the street. Its tires barked
as the car peeled out. I could hear teenage kids inside
laughing and yelling. Instead of trying to get the plate, like
the trained law enforcement professional I was, I went
another route. I hauled back and threw the bat as hard as I
could at the car’s taillights. It clinked across the empty
asphalt as they rounded the corner.
I ran to the corner, but there was no sign of them.
They’d gotten away. I was absolutely wide awake as I stood
there in the dark. My adrenaline was defi nitely pumping. I
didn’t care how old Flaherty was. No one messes with my
kids. I really felt like killing someone.
Brian came up behind me as I was retrieving the bat.
“Was that the Flaherty kid, Dad?” he said. “Had to be,
right?”
“I didn’t see any faces, but it’s a pretty safe assumption,”
I said.
“I asked around about him, Dad. They say he’s bad
news. Actually, his whole family is crazy. He has fi ve broth-
ers, each one badder than the next. They even have a pit
bull. Someone said they’re Westies, Dad.”
I thought about that. The Westies were what was left of
the Irish mafi a, latent thugs and gangsters who still ran
James Patterson
42
some rackets on the West Side of Manhattan. One of their
signature moves was dismembering bodies. And we’d appar-
ently just gotten into a feud with them?
Brian looked at me, worried.
I put an arm around his shoulders.
“Look at me, Brian,” I said, indicating my lack of attire.
“Do I look sane to you? In the meantime, try to stay away
from them. I’ll take care of it.”
I wasn’t sure how, but I kept that to myself.
Everyone, and I mean everyone, was awake and on the
porch as we came back.
Some joker from the cottage across the street gave a cat-
calling whistle out the window at my shirtless bod as I
stepped up the stairs.
“Daddy, get in here!” Chrissy commanded. “You can’t
walk around in just your underpants.”
“You’re right, Chrissy,” I said, actually managing a
smile. “Daddy forgot.”
43
Chapter 10
I LEFT FOR WORK early the next morning. Which, if
you’re vacationing in the ass end of Queens and want to
avoid the traffi c back into the city, means being in the car
by a bleary- eyed fi ve thirty.
I hadn’t gotten much sleep thanks to the late- night
cinder- block delivery from the Breezy Point welcoming
committee. My guys were pretty shaken up, and though I
didn’t want to admit it, so was I. The kid Flaherty really
did seem kind of crazy, and I, more than most, knew what
crazy people were capable of.
After the incident, I had called the local One Hun-
dredth Precinct, or the 1-0-0 in cop parlance, who’d sent
over a radio car about half an hour later. We’d fi lled out a
report, but from the shift commander’s ho-hum expres-
sion, I didn’t get the impression that fi nding the culprits
was too high on his night’s priority list. So much for pro-
fessional courtesy. The best we could do was have a guy
James Patterson
44
come fi x the window later today and hope that was the
end of it.
I checked my BlackBerry in the driveway before leav-
ing and learned that the morning’s case meeting locale
had been changed from NYPD’s One Police Plaza head-
quarters to the fancy new NYPD Counterterrorism Bureau
on the Brooklyn/Queens border. Though I was glad I didn’t
have to drive as far, I didn’t like how quickly the case was
escalating. My dwindling hopes of salvaging the remain-
der of my vacation seemed to be diminishing at an increas-
ingly rapid clip.
As I was coming in, Miriam suggested we meet for
breakfast at a diner near the Counterterrorism HQ before-
hand to get on the same page. I arrived fi rst and scored us
a window booth overlooking an expansive junkyard
vista.
A muted Channel Two news story about the bomb
threat was playing on the TV behind the counter. An over-
head shot of the cop- covered public library was followed
by another one of a pretty female reporter standing by a
police barricade.
A truck driver in the adjacent booth glared at me as I
loudly groaned into my white porcelain cup. I knew this
was coming. Media heat meant heat on the mayor, which I
knew through bitter experience would roll quickly in one
direction — downhill, straight at me.
About ten minutes later, I watched from the window as
my boss, Miriam, got out of her Honda. Stylish and ath-
Tick Tock
45
letic and irritatingly serene, Miriam looked more like a hot
upscale soccer mom than a razor- sharp city cop.
Despite the fact that she had ordered me back from my
vacay, I still liked my feisty new boss. Running the Major
Case Squad, the Delta Force of the NYPD, was a near-
impossible job. Not only was Miriam’s head constantly on
the chopping block with high- profi le cases, but she had
the added challenge of having to garner the respect and
loyalty of the department’s most elite detectives, who were
often prima- donnas.
Somehow Miriam, a former air force pilot, managed to
pull it off with wily intelligence, humor, and tact. She also
backed her people unconditionally and took absolutely
no one’s shit. Including mine, unfortunately.
“What’s the story, morning glory?” my boss said as she
sat down.
“Let’s see. Hmm. Today’s headline, I guess, is ‘Vacation-
ing Cop Gets Screwed,’ ” I said.
“Hey, I feel you, dawg. I was up in Cape Cod, sipping a
fuzzy navel when they called me.”
“Who’s was it? Anyone I know?” I said
“A gentlewoman never tells,” she said with a sly wink.
“Anyway, hope your shoes are shined. Sander Flaum from
Intel is going to be at this powwow, as well as the counter-
terrorism chief, Ciardi, and a gaggle of nervous Feds. You’re
today’s featured speaker, so don’t let them trip you up.”
“Wait a second. Back up,” I said. “I’m primary detective
on the case? So now I’m on vacation when? Nights?”
James Patterson
46
“Ah, Mike,” Miriam said as the waitress poured her a
coffee. “You Irish have such a way with words. Yeats, Joyce,
and now you.”
“For a nice Jewish girl from Brooklyn, you’re not too
bad at throwing the blarney around when you have to,” I
said. “Seriously, two chiefs? Why all the heavies on a
Sunday?”
“The lab came back on the explosive. It’s T-four from
Europe — from Italy apparently. You know how squirrelly
the commissioner gets about anything remotely terrorist-
related.”
The new commissioner, Ken Rodin, was a pugnacious,
old- school former beat cop who still wore a .38 in an ankle
holster above his Italian wingtips. With crime down in the
city, his primary directive — some said his obsession —
was to prevent another terrorist act during his watch.
Which wasn’t as paranoid as it might sound, considering
NYC was still terrorist organizations’ Top of the Pops, so
to speak.
“Though it’s still far from conclusive that this is a ter-
rorist thing, we have to go through the DEFCON One
motions for the time being. There’s been smoke coming
out of my BlackBerry all night.”
“Is McGirth going to be there?”
Tom McGinnis, or McGirth, as he was more casually
known due to his not-so-girlish fi gure, was the depart-
ment’s chief of detectives, Miriam’s boss and perhaps the
most egregious power- hungry ballbuster in the NYPD.
Tick Tock
47
Miriam rolled her eyes in affi rmation.
“What’s up with bullshit internal politics?” I said. “What
happened to the commissioner’s pep talk last month about
how the mayor wanted a new role for Major Case? ‘Kick
ass, no politics, just results?’ Ring a bell?”
“Yeah, well, the mayor and the commish aren’t going to
be at the meeting, unfortunately,” Miriam said. “It’s our
sorry lot to deal with the department’s evil henchmen.
Why am I saying we? It’s your job, Mike, since you’re the
briefi ng DT.”
“Well, lucky old me,” I said, sipping my coffee as the
sun crested over the crushed cars outside the window.
48
Chapter 11
THE NYPD’S COUNTERTERRORISM BUREAU was
extremely impressive. Outside, it looked like a faceless
offi ce building in the middle of a crappy industrial neigh-
borhood. Inside, it looked like the set of 24 .
There were electronic maps, intense- looking cops at
glass desks, and more fl at- screen TVs than in the new Yan-
kee Stadium. Walking through the center behind my boss,
I felt disappointed that we hadn’t been able to enter through
a trick manhole and down a slide, like James Bond or Perry
the Platypus.
I began to realize why there was so much heat on the
library threat. The last thing the commissioner wanted
was to have his big, new, expensive initiative to protect
the city fail in some capacity.
The meeting was held in a glass fi shbowl conference
room next to something called the Global Intelligence
Room. I immediately spotted the assistant commissioner
Tick Tock
49
and the Counterterrorism chief. Though they wore similar
golfi ng attire, their physical contrast was pretty comical.
Flaum was tall and thin, while Ciardi was short and stocky.
Rocky and Bullwinkle, I thought. Laurel and Hardy.
Unfortunately, I also spotted Miriam’s boss, McGirth,
who, with his puffy, pasty face, looked like a not-so-cute
reincarnation of Tammany Hall’s Boss Tweed. Beside him
were Cell from the Bomb Squad and the two superfi t Feds
who had been at the library the day before. Intelligence
briefi ngs about the most recent terrorist bombings across
the globe were stacked at the center of the long table. I
took one as I found a seat.
“Why don’t you start with what you’ve got, Mike?” Mir-
iam said the second my ass hit the cushion.
“Uh, sure,” I said, giving her a dirty look as I stood back
up. “Basically, sometime yesterday afternoon, a bomb was
left in the main reading room at the main branch of the
New York City Public Library. It looked like a Macintosh
laptop wired to plastic explosives. It was a sophisticated
device, capable of killing dozens of people. A cryptic elec-
tronic note left on the laptop stated that the device wasn’t
intended to go off, but the next one would, sworn ‘on poor
Lawrence’s eyes,’ whatever that means. There were no wit-
nesses, as far as we can tell at this point.”
“Jesus Christ. On whose eyes? Lawrence of Arabia’s?” said
Chief McGinnis, making a spectacle of himself as usual.
“Who found the device?” asked Flaum, the tall,
professorial- looking Intel head.
James Patterson
50
“An NYU student pointed out the unattended laptop
to a security guard,” Cell said, jumping in. “The guard
opened it, saw the message, ordered an evac, and
called us.”
“Don’t they have a security check there?” Ciardi said.
“Yeah, some summer kid checks bags,” I said, looking
at my notes. “But that’s just so people don’t steal books.
Patrons can take laptops in. He said that white Apple lap-
tops are all he sees every day.”
“What about security cameras?” said the stocky Coun-
terterrorism chief.
“Deactivated due to a huge ongoing reno,” I said.
“Any threats from your end that might be relevant to
this, Ted?” Assistant Commissioner Sander Flaum asked
the senior FBI rep.
The taller of the two Feds shook his head.
“Chatter hasn’t increased,” he said. “Though Hezbollah
likes to use plastic.”
Hezbollah? I thought. That was crazy. Or was it?
“You always seem to be in the middle of this kind of
crap, Bennett,” the chops- busting chief of detectives, McGin-
nis, said. “What’s your professional opinion?”
“Actually, my gut says it’s a lone nut,” I said. “If it were
Hezbollah, why not just set it off? An attention- seeking
nut with some particularly dangerous mechanical skills
seems to be a better fi t.”
There was a lot of grumbling. The idea that the bomb
might not be terrorism wasn’t a particularly popular one.
Tick Tock
51
After all, if it was just a lone, sick freak, then why were we
all here?
“What about the explosive?” the Intel chief said. “It’s
from overseas. Maybe the whole nutcase note thing is just
window dressing in order to get us off balance. Are nuts
usually this organized?”
“You’d be surprised,” Miriam said.
“If there aren’t any objections, I say we keep it in Major
Case until further notice,” said the Counterterrorism head
as he glanced impatiently around the table.
I was thinking about voicing an objection of my own
about how I was supposed to be on vacation, until Miriam
gave me a look.
“And try to keep your face from appearing on TV, huh,
Bennett? This is a confi dential case,” McGirth said as I was
leaving. “I know how hard you fi nd that at times.”
I was opening my mouth to return a pithy comment
when Miriam appeared at my back and ushered me out.
52
Chapter 12
WITH THAT BUREAUCRATIC HURDLE painfully
tripped over, we headed back to Manhattan. Sunday or no
Sunday, we needed to go to our squad room on the elev-
enth fl oor of One Police Plaza in order to put together a
Major Case Squad task force on the Lawrence Bomber
Case, as we were now calling it.
I followed Miriam’s Honda through Queens and over
the 59th Street Bridge. Beyond the windshield, Manhat-
tan’s countless windows seemed to stare at me through the
bridge’s rusty girders. The thought that somebody behind
one of them might be right now meticulously plotting to
blow up his fellow human beings was not a comforting
one. Especially as I hurried across the rattletrap bridge.
I received a text on my smartphone as we arrived down-
town and snuck in through the back door of HQ.
It was from Emily Parker, an FBI agent I’d worked with
on my last case. We’d stayed close since the investigation,
Tick Tock
53
so I knew Emily worked a desk at the Bureau’s VICAP, Vio-
lent Criminal Apprehension Program, which dealt with
cheerful things like homicides, sexual assaults, and uniden-
tifi ed human remains.
Just heard about ur performance at NYCT
Blue. Don’t u love working weekends? U the
primary on the Library Bomb thing?
Talk about a security leak, I thought. How the hell had
she found out about our secret meeting this fast on a Sun-
day? One of her fellow FBI agents at the meeting must have
told her, I surmised. She wouldn’t actually go out with one
of those organic- food- eating geeks, would she?
The fact was, Emily was an attractive lady to whom I’d
become quite attached. Not quite fi rmly enough for my
liking, but I did get to sample her lipstick in the back of a
taxi after the case’s conclusion. I remembered its taste
fondly. Very fondly, in fact.
Thinking about it, I suddenly remembered the kiss I’d
shared with Mary Catherine on the moonlit beach the
night before. That was pretty good, too, come to think of
it. Being single was fun, though confusing at times.
Affi rmative, I thumbed. Mike Bennett, Chief
of the Library Cops.
LOL, she hit me back as I was getting into the elevator.
I heard ur leaning toward a single actor.
U need something to bounce, don’t forget
ur cousins down here at Quantico.
Kissing cousins, I thought.
James Patterson
54
“You coming or what, text boy?” my boss, Miriam, said
as the elevator door opened on eleven. “You’re worse than
my twelve- year- old.”
“Coming, Mother,” I said, tucking away my phone
before it got confi scated.
55
Chapter 13
BERGER’S HAIR WAS STILL wet from his shower as he
drove his blue Mercedes eastbound out of Manhattan on
the Cross Bronx Expressway. Spotting a seagull on the top
rail of an exhaust- blackened overpass, he consulted the
satellite navigation system screen on the convertible’s pol-
ished wood dash. Not yet noon and he was almost there.
He was running just the way he liked to, ahead of schedule.
He sipped at a container of black coffee and then slid it
back into the cup holder before putting on his turn indica-
tor and easing onto the exit ramp for I-95 North. Minutes
later, he pulled off at exit eleven in the northbound lane
toward the Pelham section of the Bronx. He drove around
for ten minutes before he stopped on a deserted strip of
Baychester Avenue.
He sat and stared out at the vista of urban blight. Mas-
sive weeds known as ghetto palm trees commanded the
cracks in the stained cement sidewalk beside him. In the
James Patterson
56
distance beyond them were buildings, block upon block of
massive, ugly brick apartment buildings.
The cluster of decrepit high- rises was called Co-op
City. From what he’d read, it was the largest single resi-
dential development in the United States. Built on a swampy
landfi ll in the 1960s, it was supposed to be the progressive
answer to New York City’s middle- class housing problem.
Instead, like most unfortunate progressive solutions, it
had quickly become the problem.
Berger wondered what the urban wasteland had looked
like in December of 1975. Worse, he decided with a shake
of his head.
Enough nonsense, he thought as he drained his cup.
He closed his eyes and cleared his mind of everything but
the job at hand. He took several slow, deep breaths like an
actor waiting backstage.
He was still sitting there doing his breathing exercises
when the kitted- out pearl gray Denali SUV that he was
waiting for passed and pulled over a couple of hundred
feet ahead.
“What have we here?” Berger said to himself as a young
Hispanic woman got out of the truck. Berger lifted a pair
of binoculars off the seat beside him and quickly focused.
She was about fi fteen or sixteen. She was wearing oversize
Nicole Richie glasses, a lot of makeup, a scandalously
slight yellow bikini top, and denim shorts that were defi -
nitely not mother- approved.
Berger fl ipped open the manila folder that the binocs
Tick Tock
57
had been sitting on. He glanced at the photograph of the
girl whose name was Aida Morales. It was her, Berger
decided. Target confi rmed.
The Denali pulled away from the curb, and the girl
started walking down the sidewalk toward where Berger
sat in the parked car. Berger held back a smile. He couldn’t
have set up his blind better in a dream.
He quickly checked himself in the rearview mirror. He
was already wearing the clothes, baggy brown polyester
slacks and an even baggier white shirt, butterfl y collar but-
toned to the neck. He’d padded the shirt with a wadded-up
laundry bag to make himself look heavier.
When she arrived at the turn for her building’s back
entrance, he took out the curly black wig from the paper
bag beside him and put it on. He checked himself in the
mirror, adjusting the shaggy wig until he was satisfi ed.
She was halfway down the back alley of her building
with her all- but- naked back to him when he started run-
ning and yelling.
“Excuse me, miss. Excuse me. Excuse me!” he cried.
She stopped. She did a double take when she saw the
wig. But by then he was too close, and it was too late.
Berger pulled the knife from the sheath at his back. It
was a shining machete- like military survival knife with a
nine- inch blade. Rambo would have been proud.
“Yell and I’ll carve your fucking eyes out of your skull,”
he said as he bunched her bathing suit top at her back like
puppet strings. He hauled her the quick twenty steps to
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58
the loading dock by the building’s rear even faster than he
had visualized. He dragged her into the space between the
dock’s truck- size garbage compacter and the wall. A little
plastic chair sat in the space next to the dock. It was prob-
ably where the building’s janitor fucked off, he thought.
“Here, have a seat. Get comfy,” Berger said, sitting her
down on it hard.
Instead of taping her mouth as he had planned, he
decided to go ahead and start stabbing her. The garbage
stench and the buzzing of the fl ies were too much for him.
The fi rst quick thrust was to her right shoulder. She
screamed behind his cupped hand and looked up at the
windows and back terraces of her twenty- story building
for help. But there were just humming, dripping air condi-
tioners and blank, empty panes of glass. They were all
alone.
She screamed two more times as Berger removed the
knife with a slight tug and then thrust it forward into her
left shoulder. She started to weep silently as her blood
dripped to the nasty, stained cement.
“There, see?” he said, patting her on the cheek with his
free bloody hand. “It’s not so bad, right? Almost done,
baby. In a minute, we’ll both be out of this stinking hole.
You’re doing so fi ne.”
59
Chapter 14
STILL AT MY DESK LATE SUNDAY AFTERNOON, I’d
spent the last two hours scouring the NYPD and FBI data-
bases for any open cases involving the name Lawrence.
Though there were quite a few, not one of them seemed to
have anything to do with explosives or serial bombings.
My eyes felt like blown fuses after I’d sifted through case
after irrelevant case.
I glanced up from my computer at the cartoon on the
wall of my cubicle, where two cops were arresting a guy
next to a dead Pillsbury Doughboy. “His fi ngerprints match
the one on the victim’s belly,” one of the cops was saying.
If only I could catch a slam dunk like that, I thought,
groaning as I rubbed my tired, nonsmiling Irish eyes with
the heels of my hands.
Scattered around the bullpen behind me, half a dozen
other Major Case detectives were running down the
lead on the European explosive and questioning potential
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60
witnesses and library staff. So far, just like me, they had
compiled exactly squat. Without witnesses or likely sus-
pects to connect to the disturbing incident, I was betting it
was going to stay that way. At least until our unknown
subject struck again. Which was about as depressing as it
was gut- churning.
It was getting dark when I fi nally clocked out and drove
back to the Point. Fortunately, most of the traffi c was in
the opposite lane, heading back into the city from Long
Island, so I made decent time for a change.
My gang had quite a surprise for me as it turned out. It
started innocently enough. Trent was sitting by himself in
the otherwise empty family room when I opened the front
door.
“Hey, buddy. Where is everyone?”
“Finally,” Trent said, putting down the deck of Uno
cards he was playing with. He lifted up my swim trunks
sitting on the couch beside him and tossed them at me.
He stood and folded his arms.
“You need to put these on and follow me,” he said
cryptically.
“Where?” I said.
“No questions,” Trent said.
My family was nuttier than I was, I thought, after I got
changed and let Trent lead me down the two blocks toward
the dark beach. Down toward the water’s edge, I saw a
crowd beside a bonfi re. The Black Eyed Peas song “I Gotta
Feeling” was blasting.
Tick Tock
61
“Surprise!” everyone yelled as I stepped toward them.
I staggered over, unable to believe it. All my guys were
there. They’d brought out the grill, and I could smell ribs
smoking. A tub of ice and drinks and a tray of s’mores sat
on a blanket. A Bennett beach party was in full swing.
“What the heck is this? It isn’t my birthday.”
“Since you couldn’t be here for a day at the beach,”
Mary Catherine said, stepping out of the shadows and
handing me a gigantic Day- Glo blue plastic margarita
glass, “we thought you might like a night at it. It was all
the kids’ idea.”
“Wow,” I said.
“We love you, Dad,” Jane said, dropping a plastic lei
around my neck and giving me a kiss. “Is that so
surprising?”
“Oh, yes, Daddy Waddy. We wuv you so much,” said
Ricky, tossing a soaking- wet Nerf football at my head. I
even managed to catch it without spilling a drop of booze.
After a few more stress- killing margaritas and laughter
from watching Seamus dance to “Wipe Out,” I was ready
for the water. I gathered everyone up and drew a line in
the sand with the heel of my bare foot.
“Okay. On your mark, get set . . .”
They were already bolting, the little cheating stinkers. I
hit the ocean a second behind them. I collided with the
water face- fi rst, a nail bomb of salt and cold exploding
through my skull. Damn, I needed this. My familia was
awesome. I was so lucky. We all were.
James Patterson
62
I let the water knock me silly, then got up and threw
someone small who smelled like a s’more up onto my
shoulders and waited for the next dark wave. Everyone
was screaming and laughing.
I stared up at the night sky, freezing and having an
absolute panic. There was a roar, and another wave came
straight at us. We howled as if to scare it away, but it was
having none of it. It kept on coming.
“Hold on tight!” I screamed as tiny sticky fi ngers dug
into my hair.
63
Chapter 15
IT WAS DARK WHEN Berger pulled the Mercedes under
the cold, garish lights of a BP gas station at Tenth Avenue
and 36th Street back in Manhattan.
He’d bagged his bloody clothes and changed back into
jeans and a T-shirt immediately after the stabbing. Directly
from the scene, he’d driven over the Throggs Neck Bridge,
where he’d tossed everything, including the knife and the
wig. For the past several hours, he’d been driving around
the fi ve boroughs, winding down, blowing off steam, and,
as always, thinking and planning. He actually did some of
his best thinking behind the wheel.
He’d pulled over now not just to fi ll his tank, but because
his braced left knee was starting its all- too- familiar whine.
Hey, greetings from down here, big guy, his knee seemed to
say. Remember me? Iraq, RPG, the piece of shattered rebar that
burned through me, cooking all my muscles, ligaments, nerves,
and blood vessels into tomato soup? Yeah, well, I’m sorry to bring
James Patterson
64
it up, but I’m starting to hurt like a bitch down here, bud, and
was just wondering what you were planning to do about it?
Gritting his teeth at the pain, Berger popped the gas
cap and dragged himself up and out of the car, rubbing his
leg. He dry- swallowed a Percocet, or “Vitamin P,” as he
liked to call it, as he fi lled the tank.
Twenty minutes later, he was piloting the convertible
uptown near Columbia University in the Morningside
Heights neighborhood. He went west and found meander-
ing Riverside Drive, perhaps the coolest street in Manhat-
tan. He passed Grant’s Tomb, all lit up, its bright white
Greek columns and rotunda pale against the indigo sum-
mer night sky.
He smiled as he cruised Riverside Drive’s elegant curves.
He had a lot to smile about. Beautiful architecture on his
right, dark water on his left, Percocet in his bloodstream.
He started blowing some red lights just for the heck of it,
cutting people off, putting Stuttgart’s latest V8 incarnation
through its paces.
He really couldn’t get enough of his new $100,000 toy. Its
brute propulsion off the line. How low it squatted in the ser-
pentine curves. Like Oscar Wilde said, “I have the simplest
tastes. I am always satisfi ed with the best,” he thought.
Tired of screwing around, Berger picked it up. Slalom-
ing taxis, he hit the esplanade at 125th doing a suicidal
eighty. When he spotted the full moon over the Hudson,
he actually howled at it.
Then he thought of something.
Tick Tock
65
Why not?
He suddenly sat up on the seat and drove with his feet
the way Jack Nicholson did in a movie he saw once.
Wind in his face, holy madness roaring through his
skull, Berger sat high up above the windshield, his bare
feet on the wheel, arms folded like a genie riding a magic
carpet. A woman in a car he fl ew past started honking her
horn. He honked back. With his foot.
Nicholson wished he had balls as big as mine, Berger
thought.
He really did feel good. Alive for the fi rst time in years.
Which was ironic, since he’d probably be as dead as old
Ulysses S. back there in a week’s time.
All in Lawrence’s honor, of course.
Berger howled again as he dropped back down into his
seat and pounded the sports car’s German- engineered
accelerator into its German- engineered fl oor.
66
Chapter 16
A SILVER BENTLEY ARNAGE with a Union Jack bum-
per sticker pulled away from the hunter green awning as
Berger came hobbling up 77th Street with the cane he kept
in the Merc’s trunk.
Did the Bentley belong to landed gentry? he thought.
The Windsors visiting from Buckingham Palace? Of course
not. It was Jonathan Brickman from 7A, the biggest WASP-
aspiring Jew since Ralph “Lifshitz” Lauren.
Berger was only joking. He actually liked Brickman.
He’d sat on the board when they reviewed the business-
man’s co-op application. He had the trifecta of impeccable
creds, Jonathan did. Princeton, Harvard, Goldman Sachs.
His fi nancials were mind- boggling even for the Silk Stock-
ing District.
Jonathan was a pleasant fellow, too. Amiable, self-
deprecating, handsome, and crisp in his bespoke Savile
Row pinstripe. The only thing the gentleman fi nancier
Tick Tock
67
had left to do was get a Times wedding announcement for
his debutante daughter so he could die and go to heaven,
or maybe Greenwich.
Berger even liked Brickman’s Anglophile Ralph Lauren
yearnings. What wasn’t to like about Ralph Lauren’s Great
Gatsby – like idealized aristocratic world, fi lled with beau-
tiful homes and clothes and furnishings and people?
Brickman was attempting to become brighter, happier,
better. In a word, more. What could be more triumphant
and life- affi rming than that?
When Berger entered the bird’s-eye maple- paneled
lobby, he saw the Sunday doorman packed down with
Brickman’s Coach leather bags. His name was Tony. Or at
least that was what he said it was. His real name was prob-
ably Artan or Besnik or Zug, he fi gured, given the Croatian
twang in his voice.
Welcome to New York, Berger thought with a grin,
where Albanians want to be Italians, Jews want to be
WASPs, and the mayor wants to be emperor for life.
“Mr. Berger, yes, please,” Tony said. “If you give me a
moment, I’ll press the elevator door button for you.”
He was actually serious. Literally lifting a fi nger was
considered quite gauche by some of the building’s more
obnoxious residents.
“I got this one, Tony,” Berger said, actually pressing
the button himself to open it. “Call it an early Christ-
mas tip.”
On the top fl oor, the mahogany- paneled elevator opened
James Patterson
68
onto a high coffered- ceiling hallway. The single door at the
end of it led to Berger’s penthouse.
Brickman had actually made a discreet and quite hand-
some offer for it several years before. But some things, like
seven thousand multilevel square feet overlooking Central
Park, even a billionaire’s money couldn’t buy.
As he always did once inside the front door, Berger
paused with reverence before the two items in the foyer.
To the left on a built-in marble shelf sat a dark- lacquer jug
of Vienna porcelain, a near fl awless example of Loius XV–
style chinoiserie. On the right was Salvador Dali’s devas-
tating Basket of Bread, the masterpiece that he painted just
before being expelled from Madrid’s Academia de San Fer-
nando for truthfully telling the faculty that they lacked
the authority to judge him.
Standing before them, Berger felt the beauty and sanc-
tuary of his home descend upon him like a balm. Some
would say the old, dark apartment could probably use a
remod, but he wouldn’t touch a thing. The veneer of the
paneled dusty hallways made him feel like he was living
inside an Old Master’s painting.
This place had been built at a time when there was still
a natural aristocracy, respect for rank and privilege and
passion and talent. An urge to ascend. There were ghosts
here. Ghosts of great men and women. Great ambitions.
He felt them welcome him home.
He decided to draw himself a bath. And what a bath it
was, he thought, entering his favorite room. Inside the
Tick Tock
69
four- hundred- square- foot vault of Tyrolean marble sat a
small swimming pool of a sunken tub. On its right stood a
baronial fi replace big enough to roast an ox on a spit. On
its left, a wall of French doors opened onto the highest of
the sprawling apartment’s many balconies.
Berger particularly loved being in here in the winter-
time. When there was snow on the balcony, he’d open the
doors and have the fi re roaring as he lay covered in bub-
bles, looking out at the lights.
He opened the doors before he disrobed and lowered
himself slowly into the hot bath.
He fl oated on his back, resting while staring out at the
city lights, yellow and white, across the dark sea of trees.
Tomorrow he would be “kickin’ it up to levels unknown,”
to borrow the words of some obnoxious Food Network
chef. This weekend was nothing compared with what
people would wake up to tomorrow morning.
Tomorrow was going to be one hell of a day.
70
Chapter 17
WAY PAST ALL OUR BEDTIMES and loving it, the kids
and I were soaked to the skin and shivering around the
bonfi re. I heard Seamus clear his throat to tell one of his
famous ghost stories.
I remembered them from when I was a kid. Run-of- the-
mill ghost stories were for pansies. Seamus’s tales were
H. P. Lovecraft– inspired yarns about fi sh creatures so hor-
rifying, just the sight of them made people go insane. I
mean, anyone can scare a little child. Few can introduce
them to cosmic horror.
“Make it a PG tale, huh, Padre?” I said, taking him
aside. “I don’t want the kids to have nightmares. Or me,
either.”
“Fine, fi ne. I’ll water it down, ya party pooper,” Seamus
grumbled.
“Mike?” Mary Catherine whispered to me. “Would you
help me get some more soda?”
Tick Tock
71
She didn’t even make a pretense of heading toward the
house. We walked north along the dark beach parallel to
the waterline. Mary Catherine was wearing a new white-
cotton sheer summer dress I’d never seen before. Over the
past two weeks, she’d become quite brown, which made
her blue eyes pop even paler and prettier than usual. She
turned those eyes on me and held them there as we walked,
an adorably nervous look on her fi ne- boned face.
“Mike,” she said as I followed her on our mystical soda
quest.
“Yes, Mary?”
“I have a confession to make,” she said, stopping by an
empty lifeguard chair. “This party wasn’t the kids’ idea. It
was mine.”
“I’ll forgive you on one condition,” I said, suddenly
holding her shoulders.
There were no head butts this time or hesitating. We
kissed.
“This is crazy. What the hell are we doing?” Mary Cath-
erine said when we came up for air.
“Looking for soda?” I said.
Mary Catherine smiled and gave me a playful kick in
the shin. Then we climbed up into the lifeguard chair and
started kissing again.
We went at it for quite some time, holding each other,
warm against the cold. I didn’t want to stop, even with the
skeeters biting the crap out of my back, but after a while
we climbed back down.
James Patterson
72
We headed back to the party, but everyone was gone
and the fi re was out.
“Oh, no. We’re so busted,” Mary Catherine said.
“Who knows? Maybe we’ll be lucky and Seamus’s fi sh
monsters got them,” I tried.
I knew we were in trouble when I saw Shawna and
Chrissy on the front porch.
“They’re coming. They’re coming. They’re not dead,”
they chanted, running back into the house.
“Oh, yes, we are,” Mary Catherine said under her breath.
“Now, where could the two of you have been for the
last eon?” Seamus said with a stupid all- too- knowing grin
on his face.
“Yeah, Dad,” Jane said. “Where’d you go to get the soda?
The Bronx?”
“There was, uh, none left, so I tried, I mean, we, uh,
went to the store.”
“But it was closed, and we walked back,” Mary Cathe-
rine fi nished quickly.
“But there’s a case of Coke right here,” Eddie said from
the kitchen.
“That can’t be. I must have missed it,” I said.
“In the fridge?” Eddie said.
“Enough questions,” I said. “I’m the cop here and the dad,
in fact. One more question and it’s everyone straight to bed.”
I saw Seamus open his mouth.
“With spankings,” I added, pointing at him as every-
body burst into giggles.
Tick Tock
73
“Fine, no questions,” Seamus said. “How about a song?
Ready, kids? Hit it.”
“Mike and Mary sitting in a tree. K-I-S-S-I-N-G,” they
regaled us. Seamus was by far the loudest.
“First comes love, then comes marriage,” they said,
making a circle and dancing around us like evil elves.
“Then comes Mary with a baby carriage.”
“You’re all dead, you know that,” I said, red- faced and
unable to contain my laughter. “As doornails.”
74
Chapter 18
IT WAS ALREADY HOT at seven fi fteen in the morning
when Berger downshifted the massive Budget rental box
truck with a roar and pulled over onto Lexington Avenue
near 42nd Street. Even this early on Monday morning,
people in offi ce clothes were spilling out of Grand Central
Terminal like rats from a burning ship.
He threw the massive truck into park and climbed out,
leaving it running. He was wearing a Yankees cap back-
ward, cutoff jeans, construction boots, and yellowish-
green cheap CVS shades. A wifebeater and a gold chain
with a massive head of Christ topped off his outer- borough
truck- driver look.
He made a showy display of dropping the back gate and
rattling up the steel shutter before wheeling out the hand
truck. On it were three thick plastic- strapped bundles of
New York Times newspapers. He rolled them to the truck’s
hydraulic ramp and started it humming down.
Tick Tock
75
Weaving around morning commuters on the sidewalk,
he quickly navigated the hand truck into the massive train
station. Inside, hundreds of people were crisscrossing
through the cathedral- like space, running like kids play-
ing musical chairs to get into place before the Stock
Exchange’s golden opening bell.
A pudgy antiterror cop strapping an M16 yawned as
Berger rolled right on past him. He dropped his bundles
by a crowded stationery store called Latest Edition that
adjoined the main waiting room. The short, mahogany-
colored Asian guy behind the counter came out of the store
with a puzzled look on his face as Berger spun the hand
truck around with a squeal.
“More Times ?” the little brown guy said. “This is a mis-
take. I already got my delivery.”
“Wha’?” Berger said, throwing up his arms. “You gotta
be f —— ing kiddin’ me. I should be fi nished my deliveries
already. Central just called and said to drop these off. Let
me call these jag- offs back. Left my cell phone in the truck.
I’ll be back in a second.”
The Asian guy shook his head at the chest- high stack
as Berger quickly rolled the hand truck away.
As Berger passed the antiterror cop on his way out, he
went into his pocket and slid ballistic ear protectors into
his ears. Then he turned into the long Lexington Avenue
Corridor exit, took the cell phone from his pocket, and
dialed the number for the trigger in the massive paper-
wrapped bomb he’d just planted.
James Patterson
76
He winced as fi fty pounds of plastic explosive deto-
nated with an eardrum- splitting ba-bam! Ten feet from the
exit door, a chunk of cream- colored marble the size of a
pizza slid past him like a shuffl eboard disk. A man’s brief-
case followed. A cloud of dust and hot smoke followed him
out the door into the street.
Outside on Lexington, cars had stopped. On the side-
walk, people were turned toward the station’s entrance,
arrested in place like fi gures in a model- train display. The
hand truck clattered over as Berger rolled it off the curb.
Passing the rear of the truck he’d parked, he crossed the
street and turned the corner of 43rd Street, walking quickly
with his head down, the iPhone still in his hand.
When he was halfway up the block, he took a breath
and dialed the other mobile phone trigger.
The one attached to the incendiary device in the cab of
the truck.
Someone screamed. When he glanced over his shoul-
der, a pillar of thick black smoke was billowing up between
the offi ce towers.
Instead of creating just a distracting blazing truck, he’d
seriously thought about fi lling the rear of the truck with
diesel- soaked ammonium nitrate, like the Oklahoma City
bomber did, but in the end he’d decided against it.
He chucked the hat and the glasses and the Christ
head, feeling unsure for a moment, shaking his head.
All in due time, he thought.
He glanced back at the ink black pinwheeling mush-
Tick Tock
77
room cloud sailing into the July morning sky as he hit
Third Avenue and started walking uptown. The fi rst sirens
started in the distance.
He hadn’t crossed the line this time, Berger knew.
He’d just erased it.
78
Chapter 19
I GOT UP EARLY THE NEXT MORNING. In the pre-
dawn gray, I threw on some fl ip- fl ops and biked over to a
deli a couple of blocks north of our beach bungalow. After
I bought a dozen and a half Kaiser rolls and two pounds of
bacon, I sat with a cup of coffee on a beat-up picnic table
in the deli’s still- dark parking lot, gazing out at the beach.
As the sun came up over the ocean, it reminded me of
the summer I was seventeen. A buddy and I pulled a Jack
Kerouac and hitchhiked down to the Jersey Shore to visit
a girl that he knew. My friend cut out with the girl, and
I ended up sleeping on the beach. Waking alone to the
sound of gulls, I was depressed at fi rst, but then I turned
to the water and sat there, wide- eyed and frozen, over-
whelmed for the fi rst time by what a fl at- out miracle this
world could be.
I smiled as I remembered being with Mary Catherine
last night. No wonder I was thinking about my teen years,
Tick Tock
79
I thought, fi nishing the dregs of my Green Mountain
French vanilla. After last night, I certainly felt like I was
seventeen all over again. I was defi nitely acting like a kid.
Not a bad thing, by any stretch in my book. I highly rec-
ommend it.
Seamus was on the porch waiting for me when I got
back. I could tell by the bloodless look on his face that
something was very wrong. He had my phone in his hand
for some reason. I screeched to a stop and dropped the
bike as I bolted up the stairs.
“No! What is it is it? One of the kids?”
Seamus shook his head.
“The kids are fi ne, Michael,” he said with a surreal
calm.
Michael?
Shit, this was bad. The last time I remembered him
using my Christian name was the morning I buried my
wife.
I noticed that the radio was on in the house behind
him. A lot of silence between the announcer’s halting
words. Seamus handed me my vibrating phone. There
were fourteen messages from my boss.
“Bennett,” I said into it as I watched Seamus close his
eyes and bless himself.
“Oh, Mike,” my boss, Miriam, said. “You’re not going to
believe this. A bomb just went off in Grand Central Termi-
nal. Four people are dead. Dozens more wounded. A cop is
dead, too, Mike.”
James Patterson
80
I looked up at the pink- and- blue- marbled sky, then at
Seamus, then fi nally down at the sandy porch fl oorboards.
My morning’s peaceful Deepak Chopra contemplation ses-
sion was offi cially over. The big bad world had come back
to get my attention like another chunk of cinder block
right through my bay window.
“On my way,” I said, shaking my head. “Give me an
hour.”
81
Chapter 20
INBOUND MANHATTAN TRAFFIC WAS lighter than
usual due to the heart- stopping news. I’d taken my unmarked
Impala home the day before, and as I got on the LIE, I bur-
ied the pin of its speedometer, fl ashers and siren cranked.
Keeping off the crowded police- band radio, I had my
iPod turned up as far as it would go, and blasted the Stones’
“Gimme Shelter.” Gritty, insane seventies rock seemed
extremely appropriate theme music for the world coming
apart at its seams.
The Anti- Terror Unit in full force had already set up a
checkpoint at the 59th Street Bridge. Instead of stopping, I
killed some cones as I put the Imp on the shoulder and
took out my ID and tinned the rookie at the barricade at
around forty. There were two more checkpoints, one at
50th and Third, and the fi nal one at 45th and Lex. Sirens
screaming in my ears, I parked behind an ambulance and
got out.
James Patterson
82
Behind steel pedestrian barricades to the south, dozens
of fi refi ghters and cops were running around in all direc-
tions. I walked to take my place among them, shaking my
head.
When I arrived at the corner and saw the fl ame- gutted
box truck, I just stood gaping.
I spotted Bomb Squad chief Cell through a debris-
covered lobby. It looked like a cave-in had happened. One
of the fi re chiefs at the blast site’s command center made
me put on some Tyvek and a full- face air mask before let-
ting me through.
“Guess our friend wasn’t lying about the next one,” Cell
said. “Looks like the same plastique that we found at the
library.”
He smiled, but I could see the frozen rage in his eyes.
He was angry. We all were. Even through the fi lters of the
mask, I could smell death. Death and concrete dust and
scorched metal.
There was no predicting what would happen next.
83
Chapter 21
THE REST OF THE DAY was as hellacious as any in my
career. Later that morning, I helped an EMT dig out the
body of an old, tiny homeless man who’d been buried
under the collapsed Grand Central Lexington Avenue Cor-
ridor. When I went to grab his leg to put him in the body
bag, I almost collapsed when his leg separated freely from
his body. In fact, all of his limbs had been dismembered
by the bomb’s shock wave. We had to bag him in parts like
a quartered chicken.
If that wasn’t stressful enough, I spent the afternoon in
the on-site morgue with the medical examiner, compiling
a list of the dead. The morgue was set up in the Campbell
Apartment, an upscale cocktail bar and lounge, and there
was something very wrong about seeing covered bodies
laid out in rows under a sparkling chandelier.
The worst part was when the slain police offi cer was
brought in. In a private ceremony, the waiting family
James Patterson
84
members were handed his personal effects. Hearing the
sobbing moans, I had to get out of there. I walked out and
headed down one of Grand Central’s deserted tracks. I
peered into the darkness at its end for a few minutes, tears
stinging in my eyes. Then I wiped my eyes, walked back,
and got back to work.
I met Miriam that afternoon at the Emergency Opera-
tions trailer set up by the main entrance of Grand Central
on 42nd Street. I spotted a horde of media cordoned off on
the south side of the street by the overpass behind barri-
cades. National this time. Global newsies would be show-
ing up pretty soon to get their goddamn sound bites from
this hellhole.
“We got Verizon pulling recs of the nearest cell sites to
see if it was a mobile trigger,” Miriam said to me. “The rest
of our guys are getting the security tapes from the nearest
stores up and down the block. Preliminary witnesses said
a large box truck pulled up around seven. A homeless guy
sleeping in the ATM alcove in the bank across the street
said he looked out and saw a guy pushing a hand truck
with something on it before the fi rst explosion.”
Miriam paused, staring at me funny, before she pulled
me closer.
“Not only that, Mike. You need to know this. A letter
came to the squad this morning. It was addressed to you. I
had them X-ray it before they opened it. It was a typed
message. It had today’s date along with two words: For
Lawrence .”
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85
I closed my eyes, the hair standing up on the back of
my neck.
Addressed to me?
“For Lawrence?” I said. “What the hell? I mean, give
me a break. This is insane. There’s no rationale, no demand
for ransom. Why was it addressed to me? ”
Miriam shrugged as Intelligence chief Flaum came out
of the trailer.
“ATF is fl ying in their guys as we speak to help identify
the explosive,” he said. “You still think we have a single
actor, Mike? Could that be possible? One person caused
all this?”
Before I could answer, the mayor came out of the trailer,
fl anked by the police and fi re commissioners.
“Good morning, everyone,” the mayor said into a micro-
phone. “I’m sorry to have to address you all on this sad,
sad day in our city’s history,” he said.
Not as sorry as I am, I thought, blinking at the packs of
popping fl ash bulbs.
Around four o’clock, I was at Bellevue Hospital, having
just interviewed an old Chinese woman who’d lost one of
her eyes in the blast, when my cell rang.
“Mike, I hate to tell you this,” Mary Catherine said.
“With everything going on, I know it’s not the right time,
but —”
“What, Mary?” I barked.
“Everyone’s okay, but we’re at the hospital. St. John’s
Episcopal.”
James Patterson
86
I put down the phone for a minute. I took a breath.
Another hospital? Another problem? This was getting
ridiculous.
“Tell me what happened.”
“It’s Eddie and Ricky. They got into a fi ght with that
Flaherty kid. Ricky got the worst of it, fi ve stitches in his
chin, but he’s fi ne. Really. They both are. Please don’t
worry. How is it down there? You must be going through
hell.”
“It’s not that bad,” I lied. “I’m actually leaving now. I’m
on my way.”
87
Chapter 22
ANGRY, DIRTY, AND EMOTIONALLY HOLLOW, I
parked in my driveway and sat for a moment. I smelled my
hands. I’d scrubbed them at the hospital, but they still
smelled like burnt metal and death. I poured another
squirt of Purell into them and rubbed until they hurt.
Then I stumbled out and up the porch steps and through
the front door.
The dining- room table was packed full with my family
having dinner. It was silent as a graveyard as I came
through the kitchen door. I stepped down to the end of the
table and checked out Ricky’s chin and Eddie’s shiner.
While I was carrying out the dead, some sick kid had
savagely beaten up my ten- and eleven- year- old sons. This
was my sanctuary, and even this was under siege. Nowhere
was safe anymore.
“What happened, guys?”
James Patterson
88
“We were just playing basketball at the court by the
beach,” Ricky said.
“Then that Flaherty kid came with his older friends,”
Eddie jumped in. “They took the ball, and when we tried
to get it back, they started punching.”
“Okay, guys. I know you’re upset, but we’re going to
have to try to get through this the best we can,” I said with
a strained smile. “The good news is that everyone is going
to be okay, right?”
“You call this okay?” Juliana said, pointing at Ricky’s
chin. She made Eddie open his mouth to show me his
chipped tooth.
“Dad, you’re a cop. Can’t you just arrest this punk?”
Jane wanted to know.
“It’s not that simple,” I said, my voice calm, and a con-
vincing fake smile plastered on my face. “There’s witnesses
and police reports and other adult stuff you guys shouldn’t
worry about. I’ll take care of this. Now, until then, I want
everyone to lay low. Stick around the house. Maybe stay
away from the beach for a few days.”
“A few days? But this is our vacation,” Brian said.
“Yeah, our beach vacation,” Trent chimed in.
“Now, now, children. Your, uh, father knows best,” Sea-
mus said, sensing how I was about to snap. “We need to be
Christian about this. We need to turn the other cheek.”
“Yeah,” Brian said, “so the next time we get socked, the
fi rst stitches don’t get reopened.”
Brian was right. We were getting our asses kicked, and
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89
I was too drained to come up with some good bullshit to
bluff them that everything was fi ne.
That’s when Bridget started crying from the other end
of the table, followed almost simultaneously by her twin,
Fiona.
“I want to go home,” Fiona said.
“I don’t like it here anymore,” Bridget added. “I don’t
want Ricky and Eddie to be hurt, Daddy. Let’s go to Aunt
Suzie’s for the rest of our vacation.” Aunt Suzie lived in
Montgomery, New York, where she and Uncle Jerry owned
a mind- blowingly fabulous restaurant called Back Yard
Bistro. We had vacationed at nearby Orange Lake the pre-
vious summer.
“Girls, look at me. No one’s going to get hurt again, and
we can still have fun. I really will take care of this. I
promise.”
They smiled. Small smiles, but smiles nonetheless.
I couldn’t let them down, I thought. No excuses. New
York City under attack or not.
I’d have to think of something. But what?
90
Chapter 23
IT WAS DARK WHEN Berger crossed the Whitestone
Bridge. He buzzed up the hardtop as he pulled the Mer-
cedes convertible off 678 onto Northern Boulevard in
Flushing, Queens.
Traffi c, crummy airports, an even crummier baseball
team. Was there anything that didn’t suck about Queens?
He slowly cruised around the grid of streets, trying not
to get lost. It wasn’t easy with all the small, tidy houses
and low apartment buildings set in neat, boring rows
everywhere he looked. Thank God for the car’s navigation
system.
After fi ve minutes, he fi nally stopped and pulled over
behind a parked handicap bus near a wooded service road
alongside the Cross Island Parkway. He turned the Merc’s
engine off but left the radio on. He listened to a talk show
for a bit, then found a soothing Brahms concerto.
When it was over, he sat silently in the darkness. Just
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91
sitting there waiting was torture when there was still so
much to do. He’d seriously debated contracting this part
out, but in the end he had decided against it. Every small
thing was part of the effort, he reminded himself. Even
Michelangelo, when painting the Sistine Chapel, built the
scaffolds himself and mixed his own paint.
It was almost half an hour later when a new Volvo
Crossover passed him and turned off the road onto the
secluded lover’s lane that ran up the wooded hill alongside
an electrical tower cutout.
He waited ten minutes to let them get going. Then he
slipped on his trusty surgical gloves, got out his new black,
curly wig, and grabbed the sack.
Firefl ies fl ickered among the weeds and wildfl owers as
he stepped up the muggy deserted stretch of service road.
It could have been upstate Vermont but for the massive
electrical pylon that looked like an ugly, sloppy black
stitch across the face of midnight blue sky at the top of
the hill.
Even though the parked Volvo’s lights were off, Berger
caught a lot of motion behind the station wagon’s steamed
windows as he approached. If the Volvo’s a rockin’, don’t
come a knockin’, Berger thought, taking the heavy gun out
of the paper sack.
He arrived at the passenger- side window and tapped
the snub- nosed chunky .44 Bulldog against the glass.
Clink, clink .
“Knock, knock,” he said.
James Patterson
92
They were both in the lowered passenger bucket seat.
The young lady saw him fi rst over the guy’s shoulder. She
was pretty, a creamy- skinned redhead.
Berger took a few steps back in the darkness as she
started to scream.
As the man struggled to pull up his pants, Berger
walked around the rear of the car to the driver’s side and
got ready. The Weaver shooting stance he adopted was
textbook, two hands extended, elbows fi rm but not locked,
weight evenly distributed on the balls of his feet. When
the guy fi nally sat up, the Bulldog was leveled exactly at
his ear.
The two huge booms and enormous recoil of the pow-
erful gun were quite surprising after the light, smooth
trigger pull. The driver-side window blew in. So did most
of the horny middle- aged guy’s head. The girl in the pas-
senger seat was splattered with blood and brain matter,
and her sobbing scream rose in pitch.
With the elbow of his shirtsleeve, Berger wiped cordite
and sweat out of his eyes. He lowered the heavy revolver
and calmly walked around the front of the car back to the
passenger side. In situations like this, you had to stay
focused, slow everything down. The woman was trying to
climb over her dead lover when he arrived at the other side
of the car. Berger took up position again and waited until
she turned.
Two more dynamite- detonating booms sounded out as
he grouped two .44 Bulldog rounds into her pale forehead.
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93
Then there was silence, Berger thought, listening. And
it was good .
Recoil tingling his fi ngers, Berger dropped the gun
back into the paper sack and retrieved the envelope from
his pocket.
He fl icked the envelope through the shattered window.
There was something typed across the front of it.
MICHAEL BENNETT NYPD
Humming the concerto he’d just been listening to,
Berger tugged at a rubber glove with his teeth as he hur-
ried back down the hill toward his car.
94
Chapter 24
“GOING OUT FOR ICE CREAM,” I said, getting up from
the game of Trivial Pursuit that we started playing after
dinner. Mary Catherine gave me a quizzical look as I was
leaving. Her concern only seemed to increase when I gave
her a thumbs-up on the way out the screen door.
But instead of getting ice cream, I hopped into the
Impala and called into my squad to get the address for the
Flaherty family in Breezy Point. Was that a little crazy? It
was. But then again, so was I by that point.
Their house was on the Rockaway Inlet side of the Point
about ten blocks away. I drove straight there.
They really did have a pit bull chained in their front
yard. It went mad as I stepped out of my car and made my
way up the rickety steps.
It wasn’t madder than me, though. I actually smiled at
it. After today and everything that I had seen, I was in a
man- bites- dog sort of mood.
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95
I pounded on the door.
“Oh, this better be good,” said the bald guy who
answered it.
The guy was big. He was also shirtless and in damn
good shape, I could see: huge bowling- ball shoulders, six-
pack abs, prison- yard pumped. There was another man,
just as big and mean- looking and covered in tattoos, stand-
ing behind him.
I should have been cautious then. I knew a violent
criminal mobster asshole when I saw one. But I guess I
was through giving a shit for the day.
“You Flaherty?” I said.
“Yeah. Who the fuck are you?”
“My name’s Bennett. You have a kid?”
“I got fi ve of ’em. At least. Which one we talkin’ about
here?”
“Fat, freckles, about fourteen. Did I say fat? ”
“You talking about my Seany? What’s up?”
“Yeah, well, your Seany split my eleven- year- old’s chin
open today is what’s up,” I said, staring into Flaherty’s
soulless doll’s eyes. “He had to go to the hospital.”
“That can’t be right,” the man said, stone- faced. He
smiled coldly. “We went fi shing today. All day. It was
sweet. Got some blues. Hey, Billy, remember when Sean
caught that blowfi sh today?”
“Oh, yeah,” the thug behind him said with a guffaw.
“Blowfi sh. That was the puffy balloon thing, right? That
shit was funny.”
James Patterson
96
“See. Guess you made a mistake,” Flaherty senior said.
“Wait a second. Bennett. I know you. You got all those
rainbow- coalition crumb crunchers, right? You’re a cop,
too. Look, Billy. It’s the Octo- cop in the fl esh.”
“I do have a gun,” I said with a grin. “You want me to
show it to you?”
I really did feel like showing it to him. In fact, I actually
felt like giving him a taste of my Glock.
“I know what they look like, but thanks, anyway,” Fla-
herty said, cold as ice. “If you don’t mind, though, I’d like
to get back to the ballgame. Mets might even win one for a
change. Have a nice night, Offi cer.”
That’s when he slammed the door in my face. I felt like
kicking it in. The pit was in a frenzy. So was I. But even in
my stress- induced hysteria, I knew that wasn’t a good idea.
I chose to retreat.
An empty Miller High Life can landed beside me as I
was coming down the steps.
Young Flaherty himself waved to me from the rattle-
trap’s second- story window.
“Gee, Offi cer, I apologize. Must have slipped out of my
hand.”
Even over the dog’s apoplexy, I heard raucous laughter
from inside.
Death all day and ridicule for dessert. What a day. I
crushed the can and hit the stairs before I could take my
gun out.
97
Chapter 25
RETURNING TO THE HOUSE with a full head of steam,
I decided I needed some alone time. Wanting to make it
both relaxing and constructive, I opted for doing what any
angry, overworked cop in my situation would do. Inside
the garage, I tossed down some old newspaper on a work-
bench and began fi eld- stripping my Glock 21.
For half an hour, I went to town, cleaning the barrel
and slide until everything was ship shape and shining like
a brand- new penny. I’m not proud to admit that as I went
through the motions meticulously, some un-Christian
thoughts went through my mind concerning certain Breezy
Point residents. As I reloaded the semiauto’s magazine and
slapped it home with a well- oiled snick, I made a mental
note to set up a confession the next time I saw Seamus.
I discovered a bottle of Johnnie Walker Black Label on
a shelf behind a bolt- fi lled coffee can as I was cleaning up.
One of my cousins must have left it there after his own
James Patterson
98
Clark W. Griswold family vacation fi asco, no doubt. I
drummed my fi ngers on the workbench as I eyed the half-
full bottle.
Why not just get drunk and let the world go straight to
hell? I certainly had a good excuse. Several, in fact.
As I stood there weakly and wearily pondering the
Scotch bottle, beyond the front door of the garage I heard
steps on the porch and the doorbell ring.
“Hey, is Juliana around?” a voice called out.
The voice belonged to Joe Somebody-or-other, some
tall, friendly nonpsychotic high- school kid from up the
block who kept coming around because he had a crush on
Juliana.
“Hey, Joe,” I overheard Juliana say a second later.
“Do you and Brian and the guys want to play roundup
again?” the sly Breezy Point Romeo wanted to know.
“Can’t tonight, Joe, but I’ll text you tomorrow, okay?”
Juliana said curtly before letting the door close in his face
with a bang.
That was odd, I thought, heading outside and up the
porch steps after Joe left. I knew my daughter had a bit of
a crush on the lad as well. What was up?
I fi gured it out when I saw Juliana through the new
front window. She was sitting on the couch, laughing,
painting Bridget’s toenails as Fiona and Shawna and Chrissy
waited their turns. I spotted Jane sitting in the recliner
with cucumber slices over her eyes.
I stood there shaking my head, amazed. Juliana knew
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99
how upset this whole Flaherty thing had made her little
sisters, so she had scratched her plans in order to comfort
them with some sister spa time. While I was itching to
crack the seal on a bottle of booze, Juliana was stepping
in, stepping up.
“Let’s have a hand for father of the year, Mike Bennett,”
I mumbled as I plopped myself down on the front porch
swing. I was still there when Mary Catherine came out.
She frowned at my sad, self- pitying ass as she sat down
beside me.
“And how are the Flahertys?” she asked.
I looked at her, about to deny my visit to the neighbors.
Then I cracked a tiny smile.
“Bad news, Mary,” I said, looking off down the sandy
lane. “Which is about par for the course lately, isn’t it? For
this vacation. This city. This planet.”
She wisely went back inside and left me alone with my
black mood. When my work phone rang a half hour later
with my boss’s cell number on the display, I seriously
thought about throwing it as hard as I could off the porch.
Maybe taking a couple of potshots at it before it landed,
my own personal Breezy Point clay shoot.
Then I remembered what my son Trent had said two
days before. Who was I kidding? Vacations were for real
people. I was a cop.
“This is Bennett,” I said into the phone with a grim
smile. “Gimme a crime scene.”
“Coming right up,” Miriam said.
100
Chapter 26
AS I DROVE THROUGH Queens twenty minutes later, I
thought about a documentary I once saw on cable about
the annual NYPD Finest versus the FDNY Bravest football
game.
At halftime with the score tied, the fi remen’s locker
room was about what you’d expect: upbeat, healthy- looking
players and coaches encouraging one another. The NYPD
locker room, on the other hand, was about as cheerful as
the visitor’s room at Rikers. In place of a traditional pep
talk, red- faced, raging cops opted for screaming horren-
dous obscenities at one another and punching the lockers
like violent mental patients.
No doubt about it, we’re a funny bunch. Not funny
ha-ha, either, I thought as I arrived at the latest atrocity, a
murder scene along an industrial service road in Flushing.
I was a little fuzzy as to why I, of all people, needed to
come to this godforsaken place in the middle of the night
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101
when I was already up to my eyeballs in the bombing case.
But I was pretty sure I was about to fi nd out.
Beside an electrical pylon at the top of the access road,
half a dozen detectives and uniforms were taking pictures
and kicking through the weeds, accompained by police-
band radio chatter. In the far distance behind them, cars
continued zipping by on the lit-up Whitestone and Throggs
Neck Bridges. With the red- and- blue police strobes skip-
ping through the trees, there was something bucolic, almost
peaceful, about the whole scene.
Too bad peace wasn’t my business. Defi nitely not
tonight.
A short, immaculately dressed Filipino detective from
the 109th Precinct pulled off a surgical glove and intro-
duced himself to me as Andy Hunt while I was signing the
homicide scene log. The death scene Hunt guided me to
was a new Volvo Crossover with a nice tan- leather interior.
Formerly nice, I corrected myself as I stepped up to the
driver’s-side open door and saw the ruined bodies.
A middle- aged man and a younger woman leaned shoul-
der-to-shoulder in the center of the car, both shot twice in
the head with a large- caliber gun. Green beads of shat-
tered auto glass covered both bodies. I waved away a fl y,
staring at the horrible constellation of dried blood spray
stuck to the dash.
“The male victim is one Eugene Keating. He was a pro-
fessor at Hofstra, taught International Energy Policy, what-
ever the hell that is,” Detective Hunt said, tossing his
James Patterson
102
Tiffany Blue silk tie over his shoulder to protect it as he
leaned in over the victims.
“The redhead is Karen Lang, one of his graduate stu-
dents. Maybe they were testing the carbon output on this
electrical cutout, but I have my doubts, considering her
panties on the fl oor there. What really sucks is that Keat-
ing has two kids and his pregnant professor wife is due for
a C-section in two days. Guess she’ll have to call a cab to
the hospital now, huh?”
“I don’t understand, though,” I said, resisting the urge
to pull down the poor female victim’s bunched-up T-shirt.
“Why does anyone think this twofer has something to do
with today’s bombing?”
Hunt gave me an extra- grim look. Then he moved the
light onto something white that was sitting in the dead
man’s lap. It was an envelope with something typed across
the front of it.
I squatted down to get a better look. You’re not sup-
posed to let the job get inside you, but I have to admit that
when I read my name on the envelope, I absolutely pan-
icked. I froze from head to toe as if someone had just
pressed an invisible gun to my head.
After a few minutes, I shrugged off my heebie- jeebies
and decided to go ahead and open it. With thoughts of Ted
Kaczynski, the Unabomber, dancing in my head, I retrieved
the envelope with the pliers of Hunt’s multi- tool. I bor-
rowed a folding knife from one of the uniforms and slit the
envelope open on the hood of the nearest cruiser.
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103
If I thought opening the letter was a hair- raising expe-
rience, it couldn’t hold a candle to what it said on the plain
sheet of white paper inside.
Dear Detective Michael Bennett:
I am deeply hurt by your calling me a woman hater. I
am not. But I am a monster.
I am the Son of Sam.
The story continues!
TICK TOCKby
James Patterson
On sale Monday, January 24, 2011